Blocked Punt Touchdown

What does Blocked Punt Touchdown Mean?

A moment on special teams in which the defense
manages to deflect a punt attempt by the opposing punter, recover
the blocked punt cleanly, and run it into their end zone without
being stopped by an offensive player. Like any touchdown, a blocked
punt touchdown counts as six points and awards an extra point
attempt to the team. Blocked punt touchdowns are big game changers,
since the defense scores points directly without the offense having
to receive the punt or move the football.

Sporting Charts explains Blocked Punt Touchdown

A blocked punt is a big momentum shift in any game,
and being able to return it for a touchdown can be huge for any
defense. The two main reasons for this is that it eliminates the
field position change that a good punt would have created, and it
immediately adds points to the team's score without the offense
having to run a single play. Blocked punt touchdowns most often
occur when a play breaks through the middle of the line and gets
enough of the ball to block it back behind the punter and collect
it with their momentum going towards the end zone.